Why it pays off to stick with an employerStaying at a company for a decade or more can help your career because you're more likely to rise to a senior position than if you job hop, David Williams writes. Other advantages include accruing more in savings and benefits, and having more input into the direction of the company, he writes. Forbes
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Bald men perceived as more dominant leaders, study suggestsCEOs like Netscape's Marc Andreessen and Amazon's Jeffrey Bezos might be getting an image boost from their shiny, shorn heads, a study from the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School suggests. Men with shaved heads are seen as more dominant, masculine and sometimes better leaders than those with hair that is long or thinning, the study finds. The Wall Street Journal
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Embrace Disruptive InnovationTraditional business is constantly being impacted by overwhelming and sudden shifts in the marketplace. This new normal is "disruptive innovation". Read this white paper to learn what disruptive innovation is and how your company can use cloud ERP to stay in the game. Download the white paper >

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Making the Connection

Is your LinkedIn strategy a success?If your search appearances and profile views have grown, you know your LinkedIn strategy is working, Shauna Bryce writes. Other clues you're on the right road include people reaching out to you via LinkedIn and more opportunities being offered through your network, she writes. Careerealism.com
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Get with the flow. How payment processing affects cash flow.Cash flow is the lubricant of business. Without a healthy cash flow, business dries up. It stops. It can't function. Which is why it is vital to keep the revenues coming in as the expenses go out. But there's one aspect of cash flow that many of us are not aware of. It is how managing credit cards and other such non-cash payments affect cash flow. Turns out it has a huge affect. Download the free guide today.

Why you need to ditch multiple morning alarmsIf you want to start getting up on time in the morning, get rid of multiple alarms so you're not giving yourself a "safety net," Thorin Klosowski writes. Training yourself to get up with the first alarm helps you "form a solid morning routine, and you end up having more energy throughout the day," he writes. Lifehacker
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